Corey Bagley, left, stands next to Hancock County Sheriff Scott Kane on Oct. 4, 2022, after formally being appointed as chief deputy of the sheriff's department. Credit: Courtesy Hancock County Sheriff's Office

A current lieutenant with the Hancock County Sheriff’s Department has filed paperwork to run for the position held by his current boss.

He is the second person to file with the state as a candidate for the seat. Corey Bagley, who previously served as the county’s chief deputy, filed earlier this year to run in the 2026 election for Hancock County Sheriff.

The county’s current sheriff, Scott Kane, has not indicated whether he plans to seek re-election to the position he has held since January 2015

Lt. Dakota Dupuis of the Hancock County Sheriff’s Department has filed paperwork with the state to run as a Democrat for the seat currently held by his boss, Sheriff Scott Kane, who is a registered Republican. Credit: Courtesy Hancock County Sheriff's Office

Lt. Dakota Dupuis intends to run for the Democratic nomination for sheriff. This will pit him against either Kane, who is a Republican, or Bagley, a former chief deputy under Kane who is seeking the GOP nomination in the 2026 general election.

Dupuis has been with the sheriff’s department for seven years, rising to the rank of lieutenant in February 2024, after Bagley left his job as chief deputy. Dupuis filed his candidacy paperwork for the election with the Maine Ethics Commission on Oct. 27.

Bagley’s departure came with controversy when former sheriff William Clark, who now serves as a Hancock County commissioner, accused Kane of pushing Bagley out of the job so that Kane’s brother, former chief deputy Patrick Kane, could return to the post. Patrick Kane ended up not returning to the sheriff’s department and the chief deputy position was not refilled long-term until the current chief deputy, William Birch, started in the post in March 2024.

Bagley has worked for the Ellsworth Police Department as a detective since August 2023.

Bagley and Kane did not immediately respond Monday morning to messages seeking comment about Dupuis filing to run for sheriff.

Dupuis, who worked for the Orono Police Department before moving to Hancock County in 2018, says he has helped to modernize the sheriff’s department and would like to continue that work.

He said he had no comment about Bagley’s candidacy for the same position, or on what Kane’s plans might be for running again.

“Ultimately, my goal is to continue moving the agency forward while listening closely to the community’s needs and expectations,” Dupuis said.

A news reporter in coastal Maine for more than 20 years, Bill Trotter writes about how the Atlantic Ocean and the state's iconic coastline help to shape the lives of coastal Maine residents and visitors....

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